I had a friend that invited me to an insurance MLM it was called WFG.
They really do make money because I saw bank statements but I just
didn't feel like going through the hassle of contacting all of my
friends and asking if they were interested. I just went ahead and
purchased insurance for me and the kids. I'm a good hustler with a huge
network but I ain't trying to have my network give me the side eye.

Park
Lane jewelry is another one another friend invited me to. They had an
event where the president was coming to give a speak and throw out
$500,000 worth of Jewelry to the crowd. This dude came and I was like
WTH. The guy was cooked not tanned but cooked. Had botox in his brows
and lips. I just couldn't. He did throw out jewelry and I was able to
catch 5 nice pieces but then that was it.

Prepaid Legal is
another one that another friend is still trying to get me to sign up to.
I support my friends but that MLM is not the business for me.

Their 3n1 facial wash and Microdermabrasion wash is the bomb. Moisturizer is the bomb also. Those are the only things I purchase and stock up from Mary KAY. Everything else is basic. Oh they have this sugar scrub thing for your lips but I got that for free.

I think Body By Vi is one big pyramid scam. I find it hard to believe that people are making 100K per year and driving around in 200K BMW's selling Milkshakes. I get soo tired of seeing people on FB loathing over it. I'm not a believer.

Their 3n1 facial wash and Microdermabrasion wash is the bomb. Moisturizer is the bomb also. Those are the only things I purchase and stock up from Mary KAY. Everything else is basic. Oh they have this sugar scrub thing for your lips but I got that for free.

Mama00 loves this......shes been using maryK skin care for about 15 years......

The Federal Trade Commission cautions "Most [network marketers] end up with nothing to show for their money except the expensive products or marketing materials they're pressured to buy."

Consumer Reports advises "Stay away from multilevel marketing schemes that make earnings contingent on your ability to sign up an ever-growing pyramid of 'distributors' who are supposed to do the same and pass sales commissions up the line."

The nonprofit Consumer Awareness Institute analyzed available data published by the MLM companies themselves. Of the companies surveyed, they reported the least successful was Amway/Quixtar where 99.99% of distributors lose money, and the most successful was Herbalife, where 99.42% of distributors lose money.

They also surveyed 200 tax preparers in three counties in Idaho and Utah, where 6% of residents are active network marketing participants. From over 300,000 tax returns, not a single one reported significant profits from network marketing activities.

In a Wisconsin lawsuit, the tax returns of the top 200 of 20,000 network marketing participants were examined by the Attorney General. The average income of this top 1% was -$900.

Newsweek found that fewer than 1% of MonaVie distributors ever qualified for any commission at all, and less than 1 in 1,000 recovered the cost of their required monthly purchases.

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